I wonder if something happened earlier to drive the girl to her breaking point!

Ya know, who cares? Part of being grown up enough to drive a car is being responsible enough to keep your emotions from affecting your driving. She paid the price for letting impatience (or whatever - and if anyone mentions Asperger's my head will go 'splodey) turn her into a bad driver.

I hope she got a big fine.

I believe I may have mentioned this before. I saw a fellow driving down the walkway. He had a bumper sticker on the back of his vehicle which said, "If you don't like the way I drive, stay off the sidewalk!"

But he wasn't a SS; the vehicle was a motorized wheelchair. (And the sidewalk was inside the Mall of New Hampshire.) I laughed out loud!

I agree. A bad day isn't an excuse for being rude, or in this case dangerous.

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

I'm in a little Mom and Pop kolache place. They don't have wifi, so I'm using my wifi hot spot and surfing while I eat. They don't mind.

A lady came in saw me on the web got her food, opened her ipad, and asked the staff for the wifi password. They tell her they don't have wifi. She starts ranting - calling them names. She expects them to know how do do this stuff. I interrupt saying Madam I'm on my own personal wifi hot spot they don't have one here. (The restaurant next door did and it used to bleed into here. But they were locked out for not paying the rent).

Then SS wanted my wifi password - guess what not happening. I have 5 gigs a month and will be on school vacation for 2 weeks. I don't know how much I will be using it around town. The owner told her to leave. I'm waiting till I'm sure she has left the parking lot before I leave to go do my shopping.

I have the 5 gig deal too. I have had people at school get snarky with me because I wouldnt let them access my WiFi. Sorry, pal. You no chip in with bill, you no get my WiFi!

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

Logged

"The first rule is to keep an untroubled spirit. The second is to look things in the face and know them for what they are."

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

It's understandable that you would want to be very careful when choosing decent beans from a scudsy/dodgy looking bin at almost $4 a pound. However, this guy was combing and combing his fingers through them all, and they were beautiful beans to start. I had looked at them.

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

It's understandable that you would want to be very careful when choosing decent beans from a scudsy/dodgy looking bin at almost $4 a pound. However, this guy was combing and combing his fingers through them all, and they were beautiful beans to start. I had looked at them.

Honestly, everybody should wash their veggies before they eat them anyway, so people having their hands all over them in the store isn't really an issue. Bouncing them around, bruising them, or damaging them, yes, problem. But just hands, no...

Of course, I'm also like the least germaphobic person in the world, so YMMV...

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

It's understandable that you would want to be very careful when choosing decent beans from a scudsy/dodgy looking bin at almost $4 a pound. However, this guy was combing and combing his fingers through them all, and they were beautiful beans to start. I had looked at them.

Honestly, everybody should wash their veggies before they eat them anyway, so people having their hands all over them in the store isn't really an issue. Bouncing them around, bruising them, or damaging them, yes, problem. But just hands, no...

Of course, I'm also like the least germaphobic person in the world, so YMMV...

I'm with you, clio917. I fail to see the SS other than hogging the display so no one else could have some, too.

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

It's understandable that you would want to be very careful when choosing decent beans from a scudsy/dodgy looking bin at almost $4 a pound. However, this guy was combing and combing his fingers through them all, and they were beautiful beans to start. I had looked at them.

Honestly, everybody should wash their veggies before they eat them anyway, so people having their hands all over them in the store isn't really an issue. Bouncing them around, bruising them, or damaging them, yes, problem. But just hands, no...

Of course, I'm also like the least germaphobic person in the world, so YMMV...

I'm with you, clio917. I fail to see the SS other than hogging the display so no one else could have some, too.

OK guys, guess I'm a bit of a germaphobe. I feel squicky just picturing him.

Most people don't wash their veggies in soap and water, though at least people generally cook green beans.

My mother had a friend who lived in a country with poor health standards for a time. Friend actually did wash her salad greens and any produce that she wanted to eat raw in dish soap and water.

I wonder if something happened earlier to drive the girl to her breaking point!

Ya know, who cares? Part of being grown up enough to drive a car is being responsible enough to keep your emotions from affecting your driving. She paid the price for letting impatience (or whatever - and if anyone mentions Asperger's my head will go 'splodey) turn her into a bad driver.

I hope she got a big fine.

Asperger's would excuse her for not knowing correct social cues and coming off as pushy or oversharing. Definitely not for screaming in rage at a bus full of schoolchildren.

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

It's understandable that you would want to be very careful when choosing decent beans from a scudsy/dodgy looking bin at almost $4 a pound. However, this guy was combing and combing his fingers through them all, and they were beautiful beans to start. I had looked at them.

Honestly, everybody should wash their veggies before they eat them anyway, so people having their hands all over them in the store isn't really an issue. Bouncing them around, bruising them, or damaging them, yes, problem. But just hands, no...

Of course, I'm also like the least germaphobic person in the world, so YMMV...

I don't wash my veggies because I'm cooking them in hot water anyway. That'll take care of the germs.

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

Sorry, that's me, except I don't get in anyone else's way. Fresh green beans are $3.99 a pound here, so I pick each bean to make sure it's not old, hard, woody, wilted, etc. I find old/hard/woody green beans inedible and certainly not worth more than hamburger meat on a per pound basis. I won't buy prewrapped green beans because they throw too many old/moldy green beans in the middle.

It's understandable that you would want to be very careful when choosing decent beans from a scudsy/dodgy looking bin at almost $4 a pound. However, this guy was combing and combing his fingers through them all, and they were beautiful beans to start. I had looked at them.

Honestly, everybody should wash their veggies before they eat them anyway, so people having their hands all over them in the store isn't really an issue. Bouncing them around, bruising them, or damaging them, yes, problem. But just hands, no...

Of course, I'm also like the least germaphobic person in the world, so YMMV...

I don't wash my veggies because I'm cooking them in hot water anyway. That'll take care of the germs.

You should rinse veggies off before cooking - not because of germs, but to remove any pesticide residue. Pesticides used on produce are usually water soluble for that reason.

In the usual Wegman's manner my store has an area of beautiful loose fresh veggies, so that people can bag their own. Special-Snowflake-Perfect-Greenbeanus combed very slowly through the loose green beans with his fingers, touching each bean at least once, I'm sure. He carefully chose one bean at a time for his bag, until he had what he deemed a sufficient quantity.

I watched him out of the corner of my eye as I got all of my vegetables and fruit, amazed at the length of time he spent picking over the green beans. I had been looking at the beans earlier. There was nothing wrong with them - they weren't shriveled or browned.

In the realm of Special Snowflakes this guy is pretty minor, but I do think he was gross. Don't most people take handfuls of beans, and maybe throw just a few back? He didn't look particularly clean, and he basically wiped his hands over all of the beans.

I'm not a gardener, so I don't know if fresh green beans would bruise from the picking that this guy did. No one else could get beans very easily while he did his thing, either, if anyone still wanted any after seeing his behavior.

O_o I hope he wasn't at my Wegman's. Knowing my luck it probably was.

To me, it doesn't matter whether I'm going to adequately sanitize the green beans later, which I am. It's just that I don't like the thought of someone's hands all up in my food like that. Plus, now I have no choice but to touch the same beans that he egregiously wiped his hands all over.

I see a lot of SS people in Wegman's. People leave full carts in random spots, seemingly abandoning them, and then get huffy if you try to scoot them a millimeter out of the way. Other people push and shove to get wherever they're going, and I've heard more than one irate businessman griping on his bluetooth about "the crush of people in here" or "everyone is here at this store, ugh it's soooo crowded." Yes, because obviously no one else is going shopping at 5 p.m. on a weekday but you, sir.

I wonder if something happened earlier to drive the girl to her breaking point!

Ya know, who cares? Part of being grown up enough to drive a car is being responsible enough to keep your emotions from affecting your driving. She paid the price for letting impatience (or whatever - and if anyone mentions Asperger's my head will go 'splodey) turn her into a bad driver.

I hope she got a big fine.

Asperger's would excuse her for not knowing correct social cues and coming off as pushy or oversharing. Definitely not for screaming in rage at a bus full of schoolchildren.

I doubt it's Asperger's. My brother has that, and while he does make the occasional social faux pas, he's a very safe driver and he doesn't throw tantrums.

I wonder if something happened earlier to drive the girl to her breaking point!

Ya know, who cares? Part of being grown up enough to drive a car is being responsible enough to keep your emotions from affecting your driving. She paid the price for letting impatience (or whatever - and if anyone mentions Asperger's my head will go 'splodey) turn her into a bad driver.

I hope she got a big fine.

Asperger's would excuse her for not knowing correct social cues and coming off as pushy or oversharing. Definitely not for screaming in rage at a bus full of schoolchildren.

I doubt it's Asperger's. My brother has that, and while he does make the occasional social faux pas, he's a very safe driver and he doesn't throw tantrums.